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Hidden Prey

Hidden Prey

Titel: Hidden Prey Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: John Sandford
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he was being chased: glancing back, saw a guy in a sport coat coming fast, and the guy was running with one hand held out to his side, like there was something in it. Like a gun.
    Carl ran.
    Still had the pizza, though.

     18 
    L UCAS WAS LYING on one side of the king-sized bed, copies of Smart Money, Barron’s, and Rolling Stone on the other side, talking to Weather about the case—about how much longer he might be out of town, about Nadya’s relationship with Reasons.
    Weather said, “She told me that they were having a little fling. How could I disapprove? It’s not something we haven’t both done.”
    “I don’t want to talk about that.”
    “Doesn’t it seem a little hypocritical, though? You’re so grumpy about it. I mean, look at you and Marcy—you can’t say that didn’t have some kind of effect inside the department. She was working for you, for God’s sake. If that happened at the university, you’d have been out on your ear.”
    And as she said ear, Lucas heard a noise that made him sit up. A scream? Very faint. Where was Nadya’s room? To Weather, he said, “Wait . . .” And then boom, boom, gunfire, a hollow sound, inside a room not far away.
    “I hear a gun,” he blurted into the phone. “I gotta go.”
    “What?”
    He dropped the phone on the bed and grabbed his gun in its holster off the nightstand and slipped into his shoes without tying the lacesand ran for the door and out the door and looked around, spotted the stairwell and ran that way, crashing into the stairwell. He saw the top of a man’s head clattering down, a white paper hat and white shirt, turning on the landing below and he yelled, “Hey, hey,” and nearly went after him; instinct pulled him into the path of the flight, but Nadya . . .
    He turned and ran up, burst through the door into the corridor, saw Nadya’s door open and then Nadya with a gun, in the doorway, face pale, blood on her hands, turning toward him, her gun coming up and he yelled, “No,” and she shouted, “Jerry is shot, Jerry is shot.”
    Lucas ran to her door, saw the body on the floor and blood on Jerry’s chest. Another man stepped out of his room down the hall and Lucas turned and shouted, “Get back inside and close the door,” and he looked down again: Jerry’s eyes were closed but he was shaking, trembling, and Lucas stepped over him into the room, punched 911 into the phone and shouted, “There’s a cop shot in room seven forty-five in the Radisson, Jerry Reasons is shot. We need an ambulance and the cops.”
    As he went back past Nadya, he shouted, “Take care of him, the ambulance is on the way, talk on that telephone,” and he plunged down the stairway, around and around, down, and out the door at the bottom and through the lobby, shouted at the girls at the desk, “Did a guy in a white shirt come through here?”
    One of the girls at the desk looked as if she was about to run away, and the other one crouched slightly, and Lucas realized that he was waving his gun and he said, “I’m with the police. You’ve got a man shot in seven forty-five, get an elevator ready to go up. Did you see a man in a white shirt?”
    “That way,” one of the girls said, pointing. “He went down the hill. He was putting on a black jacket.”
    Lucas was outside, the cold air swatting him, but he barely noticed. Where? A siren started a few blocks away, and he ran in the direction that the woman had pointed. He could see two people, but one of them was a woman, and older; the other was a thin man in a dark jacket, lookedlike blond hair, walking fast, looking over his shoulder and Lucas ran after him, trying not to make too much noise. He’d worked the gap down to a hundred yards when the man saw him coming, and started running.
    The fuckin’ phone, Lucas thought. He’d dropped his cell phone on the bed. Stupid. He ran through the dark and the other man turned a corner, moving uphill across a vacant lot, through weeds and some bushes, past a house, and Lucas stumbled, almost lost a shoe—didn’t tie his fuckin’ shoes, either—and climbed over a thigh-high concrete-block retaining wall and plunged into the weeds of the vacant lot, moving fast, sand burrs ripping at his shoelaces and socks, looking uphill at a line of trees and lights in residential windows . . .
    More sirens, three or four of them now. Lucas kept climbing, and realized he was losing the guy, the guy had gained ground on him. Lucas kept going,

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